Employers are avoiding liberal arts majors like the plague. As the Wall Street Journal has noted, recent college grads with English, philosophy and history majors face unemployment rates just below 10 percent.

But, wait. There’s more. Turns out, a person with a passable technical background can spend a few intensive, hands-on weeks in a boot camp learning how to write code. That person can then waltz directly into a well-paying gig in the tech industry.

Seattle-based Code Fellows, a company that specializes in computer-programming education, offers the boot camps in Ruby on Rails, an open-source web application framework.

Code Fellows is now rolling out a boot camp exclusively for women interested in breaking into the software industry.

The July 8 to August 23 female-only boot camp is intended to address the dearth – you may have noticed it — of women working in computer programming.

The selling point for a ladies-only coding boot camp is that women might feel less intimidated without men around.

“Women like the idea of a network of women, too,” Will Little, managing director of Code Fellows, told The Daily Caller.

Tuition for all Code Fellows boot camps is $9000. Students can choose to drop an extra $1000 for additional one-on-one instruction and other perks.

Tech savvy and a general knowledge of coding are a must for candidates.